McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Theory HEP Seminar

What else can you do with solvable approximations?

Dror Bar-Natan

University of Toronto

Recently, Roland van der Veen and myself found that there are sequences of solvable Lie algebras "converging" to any given semi-simple Lie algebra (such as sl2 or sl3 or E8). Certain computations are much easier in solvable Lie algebras; in particular, using solvable approximations we can compute in polynomial time certain projections (originally discussed by Rozansky) of the knot invariants arising from the Chern-Simons-Witten topological quantum field theory. This provides us with the first strong knot invariants that are computable for truly large knots.

But sl2 and sl3 and similar algebras occur in physics (and in mathematics) in many other places, beyond the Chern-Simons-Witten theory. Do solvable approximations have further applications?

For more information see http://www.math.toronto.edu/drorbn/Talks/McGill-1702/.

Thursday, February 2nd 2017, 12:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, room 326